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Rebecca Roanhorse, Rebecca Roanhorse: Fevered Star (2022)

13 pages

English language

Published 2022

ISBN:
978-1-5082-8312-6
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Goodreads:
58485485

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4 stars (24 reviews)

5 editions

reviewed Fevered Star by Rebecca Roanhorse (Between Earth and Sky, #2)

Solid, no more and no less

4 stars

A thing I really liked about the first book was the way every single character was sympathetic, and I was rooting for all of them, despite the way that several of them were operating at cross purposes. This is no longer the case here. There is clear villain (several, really; one is a repeated viewpoint character). This changes the vibe. I'm already invested, but if I weren't, this would feel a bit... I don't know, not bad as such, but nothing special, either.

I really don't have much to say about this book, and that's partly because I'm barely able to string enough words together for a book review anymore, and partly because I went straight on to the next one and am regarding this more as "middle section of a whole" than as a book in its own right, but it's also partly because the whole book honestly feels …

reviewed Fevered Star by Rebecca Roanhorse (Between Earth and Sky, #2)

Review of 'Fevered Star' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Totally blown away by this second entry in Between Earth and Sky. This may be the only epic fantasy series that I've ver truly loved. I am just so compelled by how Roanhorse does this fascinating, intricately plotted politics while keeping her characters realistic humans whose self-interests, self-doubts and relationships consistently figure into what happens. I love the world building, the nuanced and often challenging characters, and the many factions each with many subdivisions. This is fantasy at its best: creative, brilliant and absorbing.

reviewed Fevered Star by Rebecca Roanhorse (Between Earth and Sky, #2)

Review of 'Fevered Star' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Kind of a disappointment when compared with the first book, not gonna lie. I read the first book earlier this year, loved it, and added it to my favorites list for this year without question. This one is very clearly Book Two, in that nothing of any particular special note happens, but we get a lot of exposition about what happened.

All of the previous points of view are here for you to read and digest their feelings after the aftermath of the first book. Lots of regret, lots of confusion, lots of anger to go around for everyone involved, which is understandable but also kind of....boring? It felt like the same points of anger, regret, confusion are repeated several times in several different ways across the viewpoints, and it started reading as very same-y by the end. Also, lots of political intrigue buildup in this book, so if that's …

reviewed Fevered Star by Rebecca Roanhorse (Between Earth and Sky, #2)

Well written, but darker and more violent than I'd prefer

4 stars

This book is a well written sequel to the first book in the series. The character development rounds out nicely and the plot moves in interesting new directions. However, I found that the things I disliked about the first book were amplified (or maybe just noticed more) in this sequel. Its an objectively good book, but to be honest I feel kind of relieved to be done with it. Not sure if I'll continue with this series when the sequel comes out.

Review of 'Fevered Star' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars


‘You have arrived on earth
where your relatives, your kin, suffer hardships, endure affliction,
where it is hot, it is cold, it is windy.
It is a place of thirst, it is a place of hunger,
a place without pleasure, a place without joy,
a place of suffering, a place of fatigue, a place of torment.
O my little one, perhaps, for a brief time, you shall shine as the sun!
—The Florentine Codex, Book VI, 128V–151R’

After reading Black Sun last year, I had been eagerly anticipating reading the sequel (and finally got a chance to read it not too long after it released). Fevered Star is a refreshing jaunt back into the world of the Meridian. Like many ‘second of a trilogy’ novels, this one is not quite perfect, but it still provides an exciting sense of immersion into a complex world and characters I have grown to …

reviewed Fevered Star by Rebecca Roanhorse (Between Earth and Sky, #2)

Review of 'Fevered Star' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Wowwwwwww ... this is a whole ’nother level for Roanhorse. Those insipid characters from the first book are now nuanced, feeling, conflicted creatures. (Minor spoiler) The Annoying Prophecy having been (partially) foiled in the first book, events are now free to take very interesting new courses, and oh, they do. It’s like seeing cardboard cutouts suddenly spring to life.

This is Book Two Of N: I came in expecting development, not resolution, and got much more than I dared hope for. The Meridian world feels much more real. The intrigues are better defined. And the characters... I’m in love with half of them. They now show gumption, fears, feelings, self-reflection, uncertainty, grit. New relationships are forged here, with all the stages of grudging and developing trust. Relationships begun in the first book are clarified and better defined. What surprised me most is the quiet competence that the principal characters now …

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